"It was a battle of six years and the battle is won," Akkamahadevi Yelagi said.

"Her soul will rest in peace now."

Mrs Yelagi also told BBC News Marathi's Swati Patil-Rajgolkar: "We are thankful to those who fought the battle for my daughter."

Savita's father, Andanappa Yalgi, told other news outlets he supports calls for the new legislation to be called Savita's Law.

Image copyrightSwati Patil-RajgolkarImage caption
Andanappa Yalgi was pictured with several photos of his late daughter at his home

On Friday, people in the Republic of Ireland voted to remove the Eighth Amendment of the Irish Constitution, which gave the unborn an equal right to life as a pregnant woman.

It effectively banned abortion in the Republic of Ireland, although terminations could be carried out if a woman's life was at risk.

Crowds of pro-choice campaigners chanted the name 'Savita' outside Dublin Castle as the official results of the referendum were announced on Saturday.

A new mural dedicated to Mrs Halappanavar, which appeared last week in the city, has become a focal point for the pro-choice movement.

Many people left floral tributes and handwritten notes saying that her death had influenced their decision to vote.

One of the notes read: "Sorry we were too late but we are here now, we didn't forget you."

Image copyrightGetty ImagesImage caption
A young woman leaves flowers at the Savita Halappanavar mural in Dublin

At the time of her death, Savita's widower, Praveen Halappanavar, said hospital staff refused their requests for an abortion during the miscarriage because there was still a foetal heartbeat.

He also said staff told them that Ireland was "a Catholic country".

At the inquest into Savita's death in 2013, midwife Ann Maria Burke apologised for making that remark and said she was trying to explain the position in Ireland on abortion to somebody not from the island.

Dr Peter Boylan, the former master of Ireland's National Maternity Hospital, added that under Irish law an abortion would have been illegal because there was "not a real and substantial risk to her life at that stage".

By the time her life was at risk, it was too late to save her with a termination.

The cause of her death was listed as septic shock, E coli in her bloodstream and a miscarriage at 17 weeks.